CH4.1 and 4.2 Cognition, Decision Making Flashcards
rehearsal of what kind of memory
short term memory
Jean Piaget studied children of different developments and made 4 stages– they are..
- sensorimotor (birth-2)
exploration, sensory and motor skills, crawling - preoperational (2-7)
object permanence is beg, imaginary friends, understand physical gestures (start of symbolic thinking), egocentric, donest understand conservation (when same amount of juice is in a tall glass (tall) is same as short bowl - concrete operational (7-11)
conservation is understood, logic (less egocentric), understanding different views - formal operational (11+)
hypothetical questions, problem solving, personality, mental identity
Lev Vgotsky ideas on cognition
sociocultural environment and parenting styles affects cognition and personalities
fetal alcohol syndrome
alcohol consumption during pregnancy
environmental factors affecting cognitive development
oxygen deprivation, exposure to chemicals
trauma (shaken baby syndrome)
biological factors affecting cognitive development
low blood sugar
ph disturbances
serious pain
could cause delirium
alcohol withdrawl
mental set
A mental set generally refers to the brain’s tendency to stick with the most familiar solution to a problem and stubbornly ignore alternatives
trial and error method and algorithmic methods
randomly search and try
algorithmic
deductive reasoning vs inductive reasoning
Inductive reasoning involves starting from specific premises and forming a general conclusion, while deductive reasoning involves using general premises to form a specific conclusion.
Conclusions reached via deductive reasoning cannot be incorrect if the premises are true.
heuristics and example + what is horn and halo effect
simplified principles to make decisions
someone says they know all about politice bc the saw one show
often used in judging people
halo effect –> pos assumption
horn effect –> neg assumption
confirmation bias
is the tendency of people to favor information that confirms or strengthens their beliefs or values and is difficult to dislodge once affirmed
hindsight bias
Hindsight bias is a psychological phenomenon in which one becomes convinced they accurately predicted an event before it occurred. It causes overconfidence in one’s ability to predict other future events and may lead to unnecessary risks. Hindsight bias can negatively affect decision-making
loyalty
can be counter to decision making like defenidng family
Availablility and representativeness heuristics
The availability heuristic makes us estimate the likelihood of an event based on our ability to recall similar events, while the representativeness heuristic makes us estimate the probability of something based on the degree to which it resembles (or is representative of) a known situation.
Horn and halo effect
Judgements about people
halo effect –> pos assumption
horn effect –> neg assumption